David Kreamer

Professor Emeritus of Hydrology, College of Sciences
Expertise: Water resources, Historical climate change, Environmental pollution, Hydrogeology, Groundwater contaminants

Biography

David K. Kreamer is a hydrologist within 性视界传媒's Department of Geoscience who has expertise in topics surrounding water resources, climate change, and pollution.

Kreamer's research includes environmental contamination, spring sustainability in national parks and on public lands, clean water supply in developing nations, radioactive waste disposal, water quality and quantity improvement, groundwater hydrology, landfills, water and international security, and monitoring well design.

His work has been published in more than three dozen journals. Additionally, Kreamer has delivered over 150 invited lectures and keynote speeches around the world. They include testimony before the U.S. Congress and the U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission on water quality issues associated with uranium mining; lectures for the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency and U.S. Bureau of Land Management; and a March 2021 address before the United Nations General Assembly on world water challenges.

Kreamer is currently president of the International Association of Hydrogeologists. He is a former president of the Universities Council on Water Resources and past member of the National Ground Water Association's board of directors.

Education

  • Ph.D., Hydrology, University of Arizona
  • M.S., Hydrology, University of Arizona
  • B.S., Microbiology, University of Arizona

Related Links

Search For Other Experts On

environmentscience & technologysustainability

David Kreamer In The News

Las Vegas Weekly
Amid the worst regional drought the Western U.S. has seen in 1,200 years, and in a year when Rocky Mountain snowpack levels also hit record lows, the Colorado River system is now barely over one-third of its total hydrological capacity, according to the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation.
N.P.R.
The owner of a uranium mine near the Grand Canyon wants state regulators to allow a higher level of arsenic in groundwater under the facility. Two scientists, however, object to the proposal, arguing regulators shouldn鈥檛 approve it until a more robust investigation into the elevated arsenic levels takes place. Energy Fuels Resources, the owner of the Pinyon Plain Mine, says its investigation was thorough and that operators aren鈥檛 at fault.
Live Science
When you picture a desert, you probably imagine a vast, empty landscape far from any water. But surprisingly, some of the driest places on Earth lie right beside the ocean. Both the Atacama, in Chile, and the Namib, in southern Africa, stretch along coastlines. So how did these extreme deserts form in places bordered by so much water?
Las Vegas Weekly
What if Howard Hughes, Hoover Dam, or the family-friendly era had never arrived to change Sin City? It鈥檚 time to go into the Vegas multiverse.

Articles Featuring David Kreamer

unlv pumpkins
Campus News | November 4, 2024

A monthly roundup of the top news stories at 性视界传媒, featuring the presidential election, gaming partnerships, and much more.